Copyright for Kids Link
http://www.copyrightkids.org/


Copyright and Fair Use 2009 Marietta City Schools Presentation
http://www.slideshare.net/lpksutech/copyright-and-fair-use-2009-1948351

Legal Disclaimers for Marietta City Schools
http://www.marietta-city.org/legal.php

United States Copyright Office
http://www.copyright.gov/

Title 17 Copyright Law
http://www.copyright.gov/title17/

Six Resources for Learning About Fair Use
http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2010/01/six-resources-for-learning-about-fair.html


The California Student Media Festival "Classroom Copyright Chart " 10/24/10: This link is no longer valid. Let' find another chart to use. S.Foster 11/15/10: It works now! :) S. Foster
Provides teachers with clear explanations of when it is and when it is not okay to reproduce and reuse copyrighted materials. The chart can be viewed online or downloaded for printing and distribution within a school.

http://www.mediafestival.org/copyrightchart.html
10/24/10: Media Festival links no longer valid. S.Foster
11/15/10: Links work now. S. Foster

Try this one: Fair Use Chart for Teachers

Parent site for chart above: A Teacher's Guide to Fair Use and Copyright

Teaching Copyright from the Electronic Frontier Foundation
http://www.teachingcopyright.org/

The Educator's Guide to the Creative Commons: Blog Entry
http://drapestakes.blogspot.com/2008/12/educators-guide-to-creative-commons.html

Becker Copyright Questions and Answers- a blog that answers your questions is concise, user-friendly language.
http://beckercopyright.com/questions-and-answers/

What is Fair Use? Blog
http://whatisfairuse.blogspot.com/

General info -The Center for Social Media
http://www.centerforsocialmedia.org/resources/fair_use

Classroom Copyright Chart http://www.mediafestival.org/copyrightchart.html

Copyright Clearance Center -Permission to use books and journals
http://www.copyright.com

Movie Licensing USA – purchase public performance rights
http://www.movlic.com

Creative Commons – a nonprofit corporation dedicated to making it easier for people to share and build upon the work of others, consistent with rules of copyright. They provide free licenses and other legal tools to mark creative work with the freedom the creator wants it to carry, so others can share, remix,use commercially, or any combination thereof. http://creativecommons.org

Explanation of symbols used in Creative Commons http://creativecommons.org/about/licenses

Flickrcc- a search engine that combs through the free photo sharing site Flickr for pictures that are shareable under the Creative Commons licenses. In other words, it rounds up pictures you can use in class so long as you give credit to the photographer. http://flickrcc.org
Cite Your Sources – Linda Savage (Eventually presented at One 4 All, All 4 One! Collegial Collaboration Presentation from GACOMO) Format! Format! Format! It’s all about creating a reference page in the correct format. There are many aids to help get the right information in the MLA citation format. MLA Citation Guide and Landmark Citation Machine supply everything needed to get the format.
Works Cited.ppt MLA Citation.doc

Prezi Presentation on Copyright--created by Susan Foster
http://prezi.com/nkpsh_w0ybp8/copyright-or-copy-wrong-what-is-the-deal/

SMART Lesson: Copyright Quiz using SMART Responders; includes link to Prezi above


This post from the EmergingEdTech blog has a lot of the pertinent information regarding Copyright, Fair Use, and Creative Commons all in one place: Understanding Copyright, Fair Use, and Creative Commons, as they apply to Education

Copyright Clarity by L. Michel... with borrowed material from Susan Fosters Prezi.

New Copyright Ruling Affects Educators August 5th, 2010 http://www.eschoolnews.com/2010/08/05/new-copyright-law-affects-educators/
I think this might have been what Jean was referring to at our recent meeting.

Here is a website that was shared on the Georgia Media Listserv: Copyright Alliance This includes free resources for training teachers and materials for teachers to use with students.

Here is a link to the GaETC presentation on Copyright. The women who put it together gave us permission to use it, just give them credit. The powerpoint is excellent.
https://www.dropbox.com/home/GaETC%202010#:::22636521

The Copyright Kids

Digital Web Resources--excellent sources for digital content for multimedia projects, including movies, digital stories, etc.

Copyright 2011 Glog by Susan Foster (used mainly for reference in a review of copyright law; this time I approached it from the slant of the reasons for copyright law by talking about great ideas people on our staff have had and why it's nice to get credit for your great ideas!)